Starting with version 3.2, the syslog-ng Open Source Edition application is licensed under a combined LGPL+GPL license. The core of syslog-ng OSE is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License Version 2.1 license, while the rest of the codebase is licensed under the GNU General Public License Version 2 license.
NOTE: Practically, the code stored under the lib directory of the source code package is under LGPL, the rest is GPL.
For details about the LGPL and GPL licenses, see GNU Lesser General Public License and GNU General Public License, respectively.
Multiple syslog-ng servers can be run in fail-over mode. The syslog-ng application does not include any internal support for this, as clustering support must be implemented on the operating system level. A tool that can be used to create UNIX clusters is Heartbeat (for details, see this page).
The following sections describe the structure of log messages. Currently there are two standard syslog message formats:
The old standard described in RFC 3164 (also called the BSD-syslog or the legacy-syslog protocol): see BSD-syslog or legacy-syslog messages
The new standard described in RFC 5424 (also called the IETF-syslog protocol): see IETF-syslog messages
The Enterprise-wide message model or EWMM allows you to deliver structured messages between syslog-ng nodes: see Enterprise-wide message model (EWMM)
How messages are represented in syslog-ng OSE: see Message representation in syslog-ng OSE.
This section describes the format of a syslog message, according to the legacy-syslog or BSD-syslog protocol. A syslog message consists of the following parts:
The total message cannot be longer than 1024 bytes.
The following is a sample syslog message:
<133>Feb 25 14:09:07 webserver syslogd: restart
The message corresponds to the following format:
<priority>timestamp hostname application: message
The different parts of the message are explained in the following sections.
NOTE: The syslog-ng Open Source Edition (syslog-ng OSE) application supports longer messages as well. For details, see the log-msg-size() option in Global options. However, it is not recommended to enable messages larger than the packet size when using UDP destinations.
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